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I can't believe you check all the source code, dependencies source code and the rest of the shit show that npm brings to the party, that's very cool, all CTOs should be like you. As a CTO should you have to do this though? I'm not sure.


We are growing startup and it’s important to have this culture of understanding what and how you build from the very beginning. This responsibility is now transferred to technical leads, but I’m still aware of what’s going on and spend some time on the code reviews.


Well to be honest and at the risk of getting down voted I think a fair amount of readers will agree that you shouldn't submit Electron apps not only on the Apple store but also elsewhere, it may be a good way to get a prototype out of the office but that's about it


You're totally exaggerating, been living in Spain for the past 10 years and previously worked in Switzerland, I often get job offers from Swiss companies and the difference is minimal.


Either you are too lucky/unlucky and your experience is not typical or you think that a factor of two (at least) is minimal.


Yes, also what I thought.

For me it was as simple as installing mesa-vulkan-drivers and re-launching rx. It is a very nice and minimal editor - well done



When I was starting with vim, I was searching for 'vim [something]' a lot, from plugins to configurations, trying to improve the experience. I have since switched back to Atom and now to VSCode.

I don't search 'vscode [something]' nearly as much. Most of the configuration options are explained in the interface (both the visual one and `settings.json`). I can find plugins right from the editor and that usually also includes essential information about working with the plugin.

I still use barebones vim for commit messages, and I still find myself looking for how to trigger the spelling suggestions. I never seem to recall the `z=` when I need it.

Just because something is less user-friendly and requires more knowledge or looking for help, it doesn't mean it's more popular.

The Stack Overflow developer survey is probably a more representative sample: https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2019#technology-_-....


That may indicate users googling how to exit vim.


Some are still stuck up to this day.


Funny, because it's true.



There. Fixed even more: https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=%... . And if we take into consideration various versions of how to spell (for example vscode), Visual Studio code dominates even more.


Let's include something more standard for comparison.

https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=%...


I can now announce that this is the best HN discussion of 2019.


Don’t forget emacs of course: https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=%...

Looks like Emas used to rule the roost but then died away. What really piques my interest is why those of us in Wyoming (and the Dakota’s and Alaska) and apparently love Vim:

https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q=%22textmate%22,%2...


Because vim is great for cowboy coding? (I've been using vim for decades)


Emacs takes a fair bit of commitment in time and practice to use it well. In these days of 40 hour work weeks, and life long beginner stage programmers. You won't be seeing its usage grow.

I'd even go to an extent and say vim trends show supply of intermediate level programmers. Emacs trends show supply of expert programmers. The fact that those trends are in a downward direction tells a story in itself.


Absolute numbers could be up, even if relative share is down. Intel reported growth in fortran compiler sales, but python does grow more, so relative numbers are what you expect.



That may indicate vim users googling for how-to guides.



I think the relevance of these graphs is quite limited by Google's UI (which doesn't allow for wildcarding nor combining results)

See for example: https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&geo=US&q=%...


While that's true, what's not slow on windows except maybe AAA video game titles? e.g. the "right click" on the Windows 10 desktop takes time to show up (even on a high end desktop pc)... just to show a contextual menu.


10 seconds of startup time 10 years ago was nothing.


The day had 86400s then as now.


Very interested in getting more info about that.

Do you have a demo made with Godot we could check out or a sample "shader" project?


That's probably because he uses vim


You can change those tools to any editor. Meld is just a popular option.


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